AL East Notes: Goins, Jays, Rays, Pearce, Bogaerts

The Blue Jays announced last night that they have optioned the struggling Ryan Goins to Triple-A, and Sportsnet’s Shi Davidi reports that Chris Getz will get the call to take his place. However, as Getz isn’t on the 40-man roster, a corresponding move will have to be made prior to today’s game. Brendan Kennedy of the Toronto Star wonders if Moises Sierra will lose his spot on the 40-man.

More out of the AL East…

Rays manager Joe Maddon isn’t sweating his team’s rough start and is in good spirits despite losing Matt Moore, Alex Cobb and Jeremy Hellickson to injuries, writes MLB.com’s Phil Rogers. Maddon said his experience as a minor league manager prepared him by giving him the right attitude in these situations: “A lot of times, when you work in the Minor Leagues, manage in the Minor Leagues, there are times you don’t have the best team out there on a nightly basis, but you still believe you’re going to win somehow.”

The Baltimore Sun’s Dan Connolly expands on the technicality he reported yesterday that could allow the Orioles to re-sign Steve Pearce (whom they released on Sunday) and immediately add him to the 25-man roster. While clubs that re-sign a released player normally have to wait 30 days to add him to the active roster, that can be avoided if the “club has had less than the full complement of active players at all times from the date of the waiver request to the date [the] player is re-signed.”

The Red Sox aren’t concerned with the defensive struggles of Xander Bogaerts, writes Gordon Edes of ESPNBoston.com. Edes spoke with Sox assistant general manager Mike Hazen, who said the team anticipated that there would be “challenges,” and that they could look glaring when compared to the excellent play Boston received at shortstop last year from Stephen Drew. Edes also spoke to a Major League scout who shook his head at any who disparage Bogaerts based on his glove. That scout told Edes that any of his peers that scouted Boston’s system in 2013 said Bogaerts was the best player they saw in Minor League Baseball.

I don’t think Maddon will ever throw in the towel.
He may trade Price, but only if he gets a package that can help him NOW.
Trading Price, a #1, for, say, a solid #2, a #4, a high OBP guy as well as a MLB-ready AAA guy, for instance, might do the trick.

Yes I agree.
But desperate times call for disparate measures, and the Cards, at least, certainly have the pitching depth.
I think Wacha plus a solid position player and maybe a solid AA guy would get it done, and the cards could afford that.
But they don’t need price, so that’s moot.

Sure, GM’s make bad trades. But your idea that a team is going to try to win now by making their team worse is strange at best. A Price trade would be a mostly prospect package. From the Cardinals, I’d say something like Martinez, Piscotty, Reyes.

I wouldn’t rule out the A’s, Giants, Angels, Dodgers, Brewers, Dbacks, or Indians either though obviously there’s extremely varying degrees of likelihood there.

With next year’s FA class set to include a cornucopia of players destined to be overpaid by potentially tens of million of dollars, I think there’s a certain appeal in Price’s short term control. At the minimum, he offers ace services to get a team to two postseasons and a draft pick.

Might have an acceptable combination of young, cost-controlled players, prospects and cash to get a deal done. I’m not saying that’s realistic either, just that there are other ways besides a straight prospects for player(s) trade…

Team that could use him and probably afford to give up what is required would be Texas. It could get interesting if the Rangers, Oakland, Seattle are all bunched up come the trade deadline and the Rays are stumbling with 3 out of 5 in the rotation out.

The Rangers offer is insulting. Price is worth 3-4 times what you mention, even if Perez is the pitcher offered.
Cardinals would have to make Wacha part of any offer.
Mariners have nothing to offer. They Have a Lotta good players, but for Price, even with his FA situation, gotta offer quality more than quantity.

Odor is a top 50 prospect, Choice is a top 100 ready to play prospect, and they have some good young pitching outside of Perez. I think it will be hard for the Rangers to offer that much let alone the Rays get more.

Wacha is crazy off limits and Carlos Martinez is a pretty great pitching prospect (top 30 in the league) and Grichuck is a ready OF that can play CF and has a good bat.

Mariners have Paxton, Franklin, Zunino, Walker, Miller, and other young prospects that are MLB ready which is a huge boost for the Rays who want to contend next year.

No, that’s not my logic at all.
I am basically saying 1) Price would be extremely expensive. 2) the cardinals would-probably- have to include Wacha in any package they might offer to Tampa if they were interested in Price.
I also said, apparently not clearly enough, that, although St Louis has the depth necessary to trade for Price, they don’t need him, so any hypothetical trades are completely moot.